Anger after officers bitten

Police allege two officers were bitten after an armed offenders squad search in Marewa on Friday. Photo/Warren Buckland

A senior police detective has publicly criticised his communications manager after he and another officer suffered serious bite wounds during a violent arrest.

The detective and his colleague were allegedly bitten in a Pirimai street at about 9.10pm on Friday by a 40-year-old gang member suspected of the armed robbery of a bank 12 hours earlier.

Police had earlier issued a "wanted" email and file photograph of the well-known gang member alleged to have stormed the Kennedy Rd Kiwibank at gunpoint. It's claimed he was carrying a pistol, demanded money from a staff member and was handed an undisclosed sum of cash.

On Saturday the detective contacted Hawke's Bay Today, critical of police's Eastern District communications manager Kris McGehan for "glazing over" bite injuries he and a colleague had received.

The long-serving officer, who wished to remain anonymous, said Ms McGehan's report claiming the man was arrested "without particular problems" was not true.

He said he was upset the truth was not disclosed to media or the public after the attack.

"Both arresting officers received hospital treatment for bite wounds inflicted by the offender," he said.

"Police [are] yet again failing to publicise or give honest accounts of assaults on their staff.

"Whether our communications manager didn't put the right release out or wasn't privy to the information, which would be hard to believe, I'm not sure."

He said the gang member attempted to flee police after stumbling across the two officers conducting an unrelated job in the "dark, suburban" street.

"The officers and [offender] immediately identified each other in the street ... there was a tussle and physical altercation even after the offender had been sprayed with our capsicum spray.

"He's quite a big built guy, it was a violent struggle and the officers had to be backed up by other units who were called from all across Napier before he could be formally arrested. It wasn't a quick resolution."

Police Association president Greg O'Connor had spoken to the injured officer and said he was "worried" about a national trend where police communications were "reluctant" to include officer assaults in press releases.